Fender Necks
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- codedog
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Re: Fender Necks
No issues now
"Man is the most insane species. He worships an invisible god and destroys a visible nature. Unaware that this nature he's destroying is this god he's worshipping." - Hubert Reeves
- codedog
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Re: Fender Necks
I did for the Warmoth, but not for the Mightymite one off Ebay.MattH wrote:What about tax? Did you have to pay your 15%?
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Re: Fender Necks
I found the neck on a bolt on, had an impact on the natural voice of the guitar, especially if it's an old vintage neck free of any harshness in it's tone, hope the neck change doesn't change what you love about the guitar. As for fret work like leveling etc it's a great thing to learn to do yourself if you haven't already.MattH wrote:Nice!
I have three Telecasters and one of them is an old 1978 one with the nicest sunburst body on it. It wasn't a great year for Fender, but this one has something really mellow about it (not very Telecaster-y). The neck itself is actually really nice - has a gentle flame, 40 years of aging and is really stable, but it's just too small for my fat paws. I've had it since I was about 20 and it has sentimental value. I keep debating selling it, but I was wondering about swapping out the neck for something that does it justice - I might get some life out of it yet!
I've got some ideas about what I want - nothing less than a 9.5" radius, 1-11/16" nut width, a nice fat chunky maple neck - V, boatface - anything like that will do the job. Not too worried about the fingerboard - I like both maple and rosewood.
How do you find the Pau Ferro?
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Re: Fender Necks
I wondered that. I’m fairly new to this Fender modding game, so it’ll be a learning curve. Maybe I need to swap out a few necks on the guitars I have to see how it all works.Voxshall wrote:I found the neck on a bolt on, had an impact on the natural voice of the guitar, especially if it's an old vintage neck free of any harshness in it's tone, hope the neck change doesn't change what you love about the guitar. As for fret work like leveling etc it's a great thing to learn to do yourself if you haven't already.MattH wrote:Nice!
I have three Telecasters and one of them is an old 1978 one with the nicest sunburst body on it. It wasn't a great year for Fender, but this one has something really mellow about it (not very Telecaster-y). The neck itself is actually really nice - has a gentle flame, 40 years of aging and is really stable, but it's just too small for my fat paws. I've had it since I was about 20 and it has sentimental value. I keep debating selling it, but I was wondering about swapping out the neck for something that does it justice - I might get some life out of it yet!
I've got some ideas about what I want - nothing less than a 9.5" radius, 1-11/16" nut width, a nice fat chunky maple neck - V, boatface - anything like that will do the job. Not too worried about the fingerboard - I like both maple and rosewood.
How do you find the Pau Ferro?
All the gear... absolutely no idea...
- StrummersOfThunder
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Re: Fender Necks
You know what ?...
I've had quite a few necks of different boutique makers etc. But for fender style guitars I just like...fender necks !
I think it's just force of habit but there is something about em. Having said that I don't have any specific fancy heck requirements and tend to go for a vintage fit and feel.
Also when. All is said and done (stain, finish, fret work) you are often spending close to what an after market American or custom shop neck might cost.
Anyhow happy neck shopping. It's a fucking rabit hole.
I've had quite a few necks of different boutique makers etc. But for fender style guitars I just like...fender necks !
I think it's just force of habit but there is something about em. Having said that I don't have any specific fancy heck requirements and tend to go for a vintage fit and feel.
Also when. All is said and done (stain, finish, fret work) you are often spending close to what an after market American or custom shop neck might cost.
Anyhow happy neck shopping. It's a fucking rabit hole.
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Re: Fender Necks
you can also try out anything of mine tooMattH wrote:I wondered that. I’m fairly new to this Fender modding game, so it’ll be a learning curve. Maybe I need to swap out a few necks on the guitars I have to see how it all works.Voxshall wrote:I found the neck on a bolt on, had an impact on the natural voice of the guitar, especially if it's an old vintage neck free of any harshness in it's tone, hope the neck change doesn't change what you love about the guitar. As for fret work like leveling etc it's a great thing to learn to do yourself if you haven't already.MattH wrote:Nice!
I have three Telecasters and one of them is an old 1978 one with the nicest sunburst body on it. It wasn't a great year for Fender, but this one has something really mellow about it (not very Telecaster-y). The neck itself is actually really nice - has a gentle flame, 40 years of aging and is really stable, but it's just too small for my fat paws. I've had it since I was about 20 and it has sentimental value. I keep debating selling it, but I was wondering about swapping out the neck for something that does it justice - I might get some life out of it yet!
I've got some ideas about what I want - nothing less than a 9.5" radius, 1-11/16" nut width, a nice fat chunky maple neck - V, boatface - anything like that will do the job. Not too worried about the fingerboard - I like both maple and rosewood.
How do you find the Pau Ferro?
Slowy wrote: To Danny, everyone is either a supplier, customer or a courier.
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Re: Fender Necks
I've bought 3 Warmoth necks and none of them needed any work done. They're pretty outstanding quality.kdawg2a wrote:Nope, none on any of the ones i've bought and they've all played smooth all the way up the neck.codedog wrote:If I read that right, sounds like all custom necks need fret leveling. Did you imply that you could get away without leveling better with Musikraft vs Warmoth/Allparts? Also, in your opinion, do you think those custom neck manufacturers should include leveled frets too?GrantB wrote:Even Musikraft necks need final fret checking. Just like real Gibson’s do ex factory!
Allparts are nice for the money, Warmoth also. One needs to do full on levelling for those.
I just got a fat Strat neck from Allprts (Strat on a budget) and although the wood is noticeably not as nice as my usual Musikraft, it’s as good as any Fender factory neck.
I didn't do fret leveling on my Warmoth neck. I think kdawg didn't either.
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Re: Fender Necks
as smooth as a gravy sandwich....
So, is that low alcohol or no alcohol at all? mmmm, no alcohol, do you want to try it? Noooooooooo.